This is what happened. We were climbing up the face of the
Eiger – no, wait: we were climbing up near
the face of the Eiger, and when I say “we” I mean Paul and Stevie and me but
when I say “climbing” I mean mostly Paul because Stevie and I had found the
gift-shop-and-bar and were splitting our time between fortifyingly adult
breakfast drinks and looking for the perfect souvenir snowdome - when Paul decided
that it would be really excellent if we took the tiny train to the top of
JungFrau instead and went for a walk in the gale-force winds.
How we laughed!
Here’s one of us, laughing.
So Paul went off on his own, a little bit Shackleton, a little
bit Scott of the Antarctic,
caught the wee train to the end of the line on the
highest peak in Europe and got out and started walking.
Here’s a photo of what he walked through.
When he got all the way up to the top, he was confronted
with a perilous 100 metres of suspended
walkway that led a kind of take-that!-gravity restaurant. The walkway was iced over,
and because this was an enthusiastic spur of the moment kind of thing (have
you met my husband?) it could be said, perhaps, that Paul was not entirely
appropriately kitted out. He had a nice down vest and a wooly scarf but no
walking sticks and not even a smallish barrel of St Bernard brandy for
emergencies. He got to the restaurant
ok – but on the way back, he paused to come to the aid of a lady of a certain
age who was unsteady and stumbling ahead of him. Having held
the guide-ropes tight for her, so that she could get her footing, he was
blasted by a sudden gust of Weather and his feet went from under him, to leave
him dangling – I swear this is true – dangling
above the kind of fall that he says probably wouldn’t have killed him, exactly,
but would certainly have shattered a lot of bones. (That’s comforting, isn’t it?)
The lady walked on.
The lady walked on.
Man that he is, he pulled himself up the rope in a hand-over-fist
kind of way, and as he grabbed the walkway-bridge with the very tips of his fingers, he was distinctly relieved to
see a well-built Swiss gentleman (properly kitted) standing over him. He gulped
down a few breaths and said “I seem to have slipped. I’m afraid
I’ve got the wrong shoes on” in a fairly apologetic tone, and waited for the Swiss gentleman to reach down a
helping hand. The gentleman instead – without betraying any emotion beyond tighty-clenched
disapproval – said “Yes. You should only
wear Swiss Army Boots” and walked on, leaving Paul – well – just leaving him… Hanging.
Turns out the Swiss Gentleman was the falling-down-lady’s
husband: which makes me wonder if
Paul interrupted some kind of Insurance Crime…
4 comments:
I'm sure I saw that in a James Bond movie once. Who would we get to play Paul......? hmmmm....
My chef says 'you make Switzerland sound like more fun that anyine ever had!"
Dave G says you are having far too much fun for the Swiss. Having been born in Geneva, he knows how tidy the Swiss like to keep their mountains (and you were obviously too untidy)
Should add that my chef is currently preparing les huitres avec accompaniments in Port Macquarie in Grants' time share apt.We watched the Ironman (180 km bike,4 km swim, then a marathon!)to prepare us for Stage 11 of the Tour de France (coming soon to a village near you)
We walked along part of le Tour from a previous year - you know all those little tubes of gel that they suck down? We found some. I was going to bring them home in case Cadel Touched Them swoon, but Paul thought not.
Are we going to the Camargue, you and I? I'm so up for that!
PS: both sending love to your spouse, and the Grants and the (presumably now-absent) oysters.
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